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Cost of living in German towns

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fullscreen: Cost of living in German towns

Monograph

Identifikator:
866449027
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-93831
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Cost of living in German towns
Place of publication:
London
Publisher:
Stat. Off.
Year of publication:
1908
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (LXI, 548 Seiten)
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Contents

Table of contents

  • Cost of living in German towns
  • Title page
  • Contents

Full text

22 
BERLIN. 
But the hygienic disadvantages of the courtyard system are most serious, 
and the chief are defective ventilation and an absence of direct sunlight. The 
rooms which open upon the courtyard depend upon it for all the light and air they 
receive ; and while the light is deficient the air is polluted. For the air supply of 
the courtyard itself is derived from the street as a rule only through contamin 
ated channels—entrance halls and passages whose doors are only opened at 
need—and within the courtyard no free movement of the air is possible. The 
objections to the close courtyard are still greater when, as at times happens, a 
portion of the back house round a courtyard is taken up by cattle and horse 
stalls. 
The courtyard system of building is unreservedly condemned by many 
housing reformers and is probably defended by none. “ The system of court 
yard dwellings,” says Dr. R. Eberstadt, “ is both from the hygienic and social 
standpoint equally injurious. The court is surrounded on four sides by walls 
20 metres (65 feet) high, so that the air within is stagnant and never forms 
currents ; no sufficient motion of the air is possible. During the warmer seasons 
of the year this evil is increased by the close temperature and defective cooling 
of the air. The extension of the courts by a few metres offers no remedy ; 
a thorough renewal of the air can take place neither in the walled-in courts nor in 
the adjacent dwellings. In-draught and through-draught are blocked in every 
direction, and whether this immovable cube of air is a little larger or smaller 
makes little difference to the faultiness of the whole arrangement.” Of 
recent years an improvement has been introduced here and there in the form of 
a garden or planted space instead of the ugly rectangle of plaster, in which 
event the back house surrounding the court is known as a " garden house,” but 
this applies only to buildings of a better type, and for the present the “ garden 
house,” in Berlin at least, must be regarded as a luxury of the West-end. 
Apart from these reservations as to back buildings and courtyards the 
housing conditions in the newer districts would be very satisfactory were the 
dwellings larger and the rents lower. Houses of the “ barrack ” type 
seldom consist of less than five stories, and the art of compact building 
is here exemplified as nowhere else, yet the general aspect of the dwellings, 
both externally and internally, is pleasing. The structure itself is attractive, and 
good workmanship has been put into it ; the staircases are light and airy, the 
corridors spacious, the rooms high ; the walls have been papered or stencilled, 
electric bells take the place of the old-fashioned knocker, and not infrequently 
each dwelling has a small balcony before or behind. The tenants of such 
dwellings have both cellars and lofts, and in some cases there is a washhouse for 
common use. To the kitchen a small larder is sometimes attached ; the closet 
stands in the corridor, but baths will be sought in vain. How little diffused 
are even the more urgent conveniences of domestic life in Berlin may be judged 
from the fact that not half of the dwellings enumerated in 1900 had separate 
kitchens. Of every 1,000 dwellings only 107 at the front and 19 at the 
back had larders, 77 at the front and 5 at the back had bathrooms, and 291 
at the front and 150 at the back had independent closets. In the working- 
class districts baths were non-existent, and larders almost so. 
The general arrangement of working-class dwellings of predominant types 
and of different periods may be illustrated here by examples visited. 
The first is a house in the Prenzlauerallee, in the north of the city 
built in 1876. There are on each floor four dwellings, two on each side of 
the landing, approached from a common corridor ; while an isolated room 
is situated at the head of the stairs. Two of the tenements are of a single room 
and kitchen, and two are of two rooms and a kitchen, and the odd room can be 
let separately or be combined with one of the other tenements. The dimensions 
of the rooms are :—Living and bedrooms 17 feet 7 inches by 13 feet 17 feet 
7 inches by 7 feet 10 inches, and 20 feet 6 inches by 7 feet 10 inches • while 
the kitchens measure 16 feet 3 inches by 6 feet 6 inches and 16 feet 3' inches 
by 7 feet 2 inches. The height of the rooms is 10 feet 5 inches. Behind the 
courtyard there are two dwellings of two rooms and a kitchen on each floor. 
There are here no corridors, but the kitchen is entered direct from the landim/
	        

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Cost of Living in German Towns. Stat. Off., 1908.
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